Future Marine Biofuels in the Port of Seattle Region

Swaroop Atnoorkar, Kevin Zhang, Kelcie Kraft, Kristin Lewis, Emily Newes, Dane Camenzind, Steve Peterson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Marine transportation, a vital global sector, emits 3% of global annual greenhouse gas emissions, which are predicted to increase in the future. Marine biofuels derived from biomass or waste sources like wood residue, waste oil and municipal solid waste can be used for decarbonization. However, limited studies have explored if sufficient marine biofuels could be produced and supplied to major regional ports given feedstock, supply chain and technological constraints. We fill this gap by evaluating the feasibility of supplying marine biofuels to the Port of Seattle. The Regional Bio-Economy Model (RBEM) and the Freight and Fuel Transportation Optimization Tool (FTOT) are used to build scenarios for simulating marine biofuel production in the Port region. We harmonized technoeconomic assumptions for RBEM and FTOT, input FTOT feedstock utilization and routing outputs into RBEM, and modelled conversion, feedstock, and policy scenario variations in RBEM. In RBEM, overall biofuel production was constrained primarily by the biofuel cost, and then by feedstock availability. Providing policy incentives and reducing permitting time frames alleviated these constraints and spurred the buildout of a robust industry through industrial learning dynamics in the initial years. With these measures in place, the RBEM results show that 100% of fuel demand at the Port can be supplied by biofuels with policy incentives and suitable technoeconomic conditions, but the addition of transportation cost considerations using FTOT led to 27.8% of demand being able to be met by biofuels at reasonable fuel delivery cost.
Original languageAmerican English
Number of pages14
JournalFrontiers in Energy Research
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - 2025

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-6A20-89661

Keywords

  • biofuels
  • decarbonization
  • marine fuel
  • optimization
  • shipping
  • system dynamics

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Future Marine Biofuels in the Port of Seattle Region'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this